Have fun listening to the Addition Rock! This will help make addition facts fun!
Watch this you tube video to discover how to use the greater than symbol!
Math Websites:
This website has podcasts, games, and much more! This website allows you to find specific topics and then finds games and activities under that topic. This year we will be working on addition, subtraction, geometry, patterns, and more. Check out the website!
Welcome to Math Playground, an action-packed site for elementary and middle school students. Practice your math skills, play a logic game and have some fun!
1st grade/ Understand addition as putting together and adding to, and understand subtraction as taking apart and taking from. 1. Represent addition and subtraction with objects, fingers, mental images, drawings2, sounds (e.g., claps), acting out situations, verbal explanations, expressions, or equations.
2nd grade/Understand Place Value. 1. Understand that the three digits of a three-digit number represent amounts of hundreds, tens, and ones; e.g., 706 equals 7 hundreds, 0 tens, and 6 ones. Understand the following as special cases: o 1100 can be thought of as a bundle of ten tens — called a “hundred.” o TThe numbers 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900 refer to one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, or nine hundreds (and 0 tens and 0 ones).
1. 3rd Grade 2. Common Core: Express whole numbers as fractions, and recognize fractions that are equivalent to whole numbers. Examples: Express 3 in the form 3 = 3/1; recognize that 6/1 = 6; locate 4/4 and 1 at the same point of a number line diagram.
Grade: 4th grade Pass: 3.2 Identify and compare angles equal to, less than, or greater than 90 degrees (e.g., use right angles to determine the approximate size of other angles).
1. Grade: 3rd grade 2. Common Core: 1. Understand a fraction 1/b as the quantity formed by 1 part when a whole is partitioned into bequal parts; understand a fraction a/b as the quantity formed by a parts of size 1/b.
Picture credited to http://classroomclipart.com/
Have fun listening to the Addition Rock! This will help make addition facts fun!
Watch this you tube video to discover how to use the greater than symbol!
Math Websites:
This website has podcasts, games, and much more! This website allows you to find specific topics and then finds games and activities under that topic. This year we will be working on addition, subtraction, geometry, patterns, and more. Check out the website!
http://www.kidsnumbers.com/
Welcome to Math Playground, an action-packed site for elementary and middle school students. Practice your math skills, play a logic game and have some fun!
http://www.mathplayground.com/
Math Lessons Grade 1-4:
1st grade/ Understand addition as putting together and adding to, and understand
subtraction as taking apart and taking from.
1. Represent addition and subtraction with objects, fingers, mental
images, drawings2, sounds (e.g., claps), acting out situations, verbal
explanations, expressions, or equations.
2nd grade/Understand Place Value. 1. Understand that the three digits of a three-digit number represent amounts of hundreds, tens, and ones; e.g., 706 equals 7 hundreds, 0 tens, and 6 ones. Understand the following as special cases:
o 1100 can be thought of as a bundle of ten tens — called a “hundred.”
o TThe numbers 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900 refer to one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, or nine hundreds (and 0 tens and 0 ones).
1. 3rd Grade
2. Common Core: Express whole numbers as fractions, and recognize fractions that are equivalent to whole numbers. Examples: Express 3 in the form 3 = 3/1; recognize that 6/1 = 6; locate 4/4 and 1 at the same point of a number line diagram.
2nd grade/ working with 10 frames. Students will put cards together and discover other ways to make 10.
Grade: 4th grade
Pass: 3.2 Identify and compare angles equal to, less than, or greater than 90 degrees (e.g., use right angles to determine the approximate size of other angles).
1. Grade: 3rd grade
2. Common Core: 1. Understand a fraction 1/b as the quantity formed by 1 part when a whole is partitioned into bequal parts; understand a fraction a/b as the quantity formed by a parts of size 1/b.
10 Frame Chart